Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Church’s Witness to an Atomizing Culture
The Church’s Witness to an Atomizing Culture
Jul 2, 2025 1:50 AM

In an increasingly atomizing and alienating culture, what role does the church play in holding the fabric of civilization together?

Over at the Evangelical Pulpit, Bart Gingerich offers a hearty response, albeit by way of answering a rather different question: Why do folks abandon the church, particularly those who still believe in Jesus?

Although plenty of disaffected church-ditchers have undergone deep shifts in basic doctrine and belief, Gingerich observes that, for many, “the abandonment testimonies seem fueled more by embarrassment and bad experiences.” If this is the key driver, he continues, such departures may have just as much to do with the typical failings of human organizations in general as they do with the church in particular.

“Humans in groups can be jerks, make mistakes, have blind spots, and mishandle all sorts of cases,” he writes. “Many of the ‘I’m leaving or taking a break from church because people hurt me’ manifestos could just as easily been authored about the local Ruritans, Kiwanis, Lions, Rotary, Garden, or Women’s Club.”

But therein lies the issue: “Few under the age of 40 participate in such societies any more.”

Leaning on Alexis de Toqueville and channeling a bit of Edmund Burke, Gingerich proceeds to offer a broader diagnosis, arguing that dissatisfaction among millennial Christians is perhaps tied to a deeper and wider breakdown of civil society:

If more Christians were in voluntary associations, they may have a greater awareness of mon trends in human depravity…The dearth of Millennials in little platoons, associations where they would rub shoulders with everyday humans in their own locality, cannot be breezily dismissed, even by non-Christians. It leads to social inexperience, emotional immaturity, and an all-round thin-skinned character, which in turn leads to a jejune understanding of what it takes to put up with people, much less love them. Civil society decays. Imposition of will es the word of the day. The replacement of manners and etiquette with political correctness is just one visible result of this unfortunate trajectory.

As Alexis de Toqueville pointed out, it is the discourse and bonds of voluntary associations that helped early Americans fend off several perilous excesses springing from democracy….A healthy civil society with many voluntary associations prevent such problems, making the society healthier on the whole. However, so many people these days join self-selected cliques or interface online at a distance (and thus easily evacuate in difficult circumstances), that they don’t have to exercise true patience with people. We can simply unfollow someone or block their posts from our newsfeeds. We cannot suffer the trouble of others. Call it what you will: “relational hyperefficiency,” laziness of soul, acedia. It’s a kind of sloth; we slouch toward isolation.

In fact, the Church is one of the few remaining bodies today where mitted to the same Person, behavior, and doctrine–are “forced” to live in peace with one another. It is actually her witness to an atomizing and alienating culture.

WhileGingerich’s primary aim is to analyze the drivers of church abandonment, and thoughsuch an exercise is well worthwhile, permit me to tie that last paragraph to my initial question and chew on thepoint a bit more thoroughly from the other end.

Here, amid a culture wherein Tocqueville’s primary fears about a democracy without backbone are increasingly manifest and where Christians are continually pressed to flatten and fade accordingly, what does the church’s relative persistence in the culture-at-large tell us about the power of the light we hold and its promise for the world? Why has the church endured even as the Kiwanis dwindle?

As Gingerich points out, Christians are threatened on all sides by ever-strengthening forces of atomized individualism, social decay, and the ripple effects of each from the bottom to the top and back again. Yet even still, it remains, a last-standing witness for all, equipped with the Sword of the Spirit to stand against such schemes and weave back where threads have frayed.

For believers, this startling truth about the primary purpose of the church makes it all the more pressing that we cease with these self-indulgent manifestos — our “declarations of munications,” as Gingerich calls them — and decide instead to mature and endure alongside other believers, as difficult as it sometimes may be.

As we seek to renew that civil society, wherein voluntary associations once again fill the space between church and state, we can start simply by starting. The church is right there in front of us, filled with other faulty folks who are eager to learn from our own faulty selves, yet together, equipped by Word and Spirit to set the foundation straight for all else — social, cultural, economic, political, and otherwise.

Despite our pasts and insecurities and fears and inexperience — and there are plenty of serious abuses out there — we can continue to press forward with all boldness. For as Gingerich concludes, “Christ Jesus, the Truth Incarnate, has brought His people in union with Himself and thus by necessity with one another. He does not fail like His fallen creatures do.”

It’s about time we started acting like it.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
We Don’t Have a Poverty Problem, We Have a Dependency Problem
“There is no material poverty in the U.S.,” says the always-provocative Walter E. Williams. “What we have in our nation are dependency and poverty of the spirit, with people making unwise choices and leading pathological lives aided and abetted by the welfare state.” The Census Bureau pegs the poverty rate among blacks at 35 percent and among whites at 13 percent. The illegitimacy rate among blacks is 72 percent, and among whites it’s 30 percent. A statistic that one doesn’t...
House of Cards and Politics without Romance
Over at The American Culture, I have some thoughts about the first season of House of Cards ahead of the premiere of the second season today. As many have noted, the drop of the Netflix exclusive today coincides with Valentine’s Day, and there have been some serious considerations about how to plan for the contingency that only one of the partners in a couple enjoys the show. But the question of love is also a helpful analytic device for understanding...
Science, Faith, and Our Place in The Universe
In Acton’s newly published monograph, Catholicism, Ecology, and the Environment, Bishop Dominique Rey explores the relationship between man and the created world. In the book’s foreword, written by Acton’s Director of Research Sam Gregg, Gregg summarizes the Catholic view of man’s relationship to created matter: Man is understood as intrinsically superior to the natural world. He is charged with dominion over it in order that it may be used to promote integral human development. However, man’s dominion is not absolute....
Liberating Our Labor
“I don’t build in order to have clients. I have clients in order to build!” At SlateMiya Tokumitsu writes that the motto “Do What You Love” really functions as a kind of capitalism-supporting opiate: “In masking the very exploitative mechanisms of labor that it fuels, DWYL is, in fact, the most perfect ideological tool of capitalism.” While Tokumitsu singles out Steve Jobs, perhaps Howard Roark might agree. If that’s true (and it is more than debatable), then this Think Progress...
Beyond Humanitarianism: Staying ‘Mission True’ in a Culture of Drift
Peter Greer recently wrote a book about thespiritual danger of doing good, encouraging Christians to deal closely with matters of the heart before putting their hands to work. “Our service is downstream from the Gospel message,” he said in an interview here on the blog. “If we forget this, it’s just a matter of time before we self-destruct.” Just a year later, writing alongside co-author Chris Horst, he’s released another book, Mission Drift—this time focusing on the spiritual risks faced...
What Liberal Evangelicals Should Know About the Economic Views of Conservative Evangelicals (Part 4)
Why do liberal and conservative evangelicals tend to disagree so often about economic issues? This is the fourth in a series of posts that addresses that question by examining 12 principles that generally drive the thinking of conservative evangelicals when es to economics. The first in the series can be foundhere;Part 2 can be foundhere; and Part 3 can be found here.A PDF/text version of the entire series can be foundhere. 9. Social mobility — specifically getting people out of...
Why Christians Should Be Cultural Entrepreneurs
“Christianity can and should be a leading influence in human culture,” says Greg Forster, “We do this not by seizing control of the institutions of culture and imposing Christianity on people by force, but by acting as cultural entrepreneurs.” A prime example of a cultural entrepreneur in the Bible, notes Forster, was Job: Job was a cultural leader because he served human needs. The connection is reinforced in the following verses, where Job seamlessly transitions back from his deeds of...
Rev. Sirico In California: Is The People’s Pope An Anti-Capitalist?
Rev. Robert Sirico Catholics@Work in Danville, Calif. is pleased to present Fr. Robert Sirico, the President of the Acton Institute, as their guest speaker at the March 11, 2014 breakfast forum. Rev. Sirico will be speaking about Pope Francis and his recent apostolic letter, Evangelii Gaudium, and the issue of poverty. John Duncan, president of Catholics@Work, says, After listening to and reading articles by Fr. Sirico on this subject it seems to me that there are two dimensions we must...
Survey: What Do You Look for in a Pastor?
Finding the right pastor or priest for a congregation can be a trying ordeal. It is stressful for the candidates, stressful mittees, stressful for elders and bishops (where applicable). In some cases, qualified ministers have no church, and churches have no permanent minister. What accounts for the disconnect between what sort of candidates are vying for churches and the sort for which churches are actually looking? In economic terms, why is there seemingly a dissonance between supply (ministers) and demand...
Free Ebook: Catholicism, Ecology And The Environment
Acton’s newest monograph, Catholicism, Ecology, and the Environment: A Bishop’s Reflection, is now available as a free ebook download until Monday, February 17. The book, with a foreword from Acton’s Director of Research, Sam Gregg, is authored byBishop Dominique Rey. Bishop Rey graduated with a degree in economics at Lyon and obtained a PhD in fiscal policy at Clermont–Ferrand. He served France as a financial inspector in the Ministry of Finance between 1976 and 1979. Bishop Rey earned a degree...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved